Struggling Through The Texas Drought Of 2022

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  • čas přidán 25. 07. 2022
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Komentáře • 156

  • @jamesmarshall6877
    @jamesmarshall6877 Před 2 lety +7

    That green patch where the slope breaks on the hill is a key point. It is growing there because water that flows down the hill carries nutrients with it and deposits it in that spot. If you excavate a key point and dig a small pond you will have a superior water catchment. A couple of those and drought won’t hurt as bad, especially if your grasses have deep tap roots. You can’t make it rain, but you can save every drop that falls on your pasture and prepare you for longer dry spells.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +4

      Great comment James! Will work on that!

    • @franc362
      @franc362 Před 2 lety +1

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher, If you have fire ant nest for sure is water direct beneath but probably will be too deep but sure is
      But where those green patches are has to be water like James mentioned it

    • @beorntwit711
      @beorntwit711 Před rokem +1

      More graziers in US should be aware of keyline plowing their pasture to spread and protect rainfall in their soil.
      Additionally, while subsoiling, adding biochar (perhaps injcted into the rips) is a great way to increase water retention (one of many incredible biochar properties as a soil amendment).

    • @angelmediadorentrenosotros7579
      @angelmediadorentrenosotros7579 Před rokem

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
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  • @jennaz.6980
    @jennaz.6980 Před rokem +6

    Thank you for identifying the different types of the grasses and great information. We live in the Texas Hill Country which we pray every day for rain because just last week three fires started and are still burning. God Bless the first responders, fire fighters, ranchers and farmers. We will make it through. 🙂

  • @amylittrell1337
    @amylittrell1337 Před 2 lety +5

    Praying you will have rain soon. Keep your chin up

  • @JL_10acres
    @JL_10acres Před 2 lety +9

    Really good information! You have a a lifetime of experience. Thanks for sharing how you are working the difficult weather down there. Hang in there!

  • @bronzearmy2645
    @bronzearmy2645 Před 2 lety +3

    Water well and pump have been life savers. SouthEast Texas has rain in the forecast though so that will be nice.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety

      I sure hope they get some!

    • @ronaldschatte1383
      @ronaldschatte1383 Před rokem

      I penned up our 13 head of cattle in a paddock for about a week back in January while we herded the feral horses to sell.
      Hauling water from the farm to the paddock became rather taxing and never made me more happy to have a water well supplied trough on the property. Now in the drought that holds true as well, almost all the stock tanks have dried up.
      The fantail goldfish reproduced in the 150 gallon and still no noticeable algae, such a great relationship to keep the stock water trough clean!

  • @markodeen4105
    @markodeen4105 Před 2 lety +3

    Thanks for the insights into what's going on with you in Texas

  • @CharlesGann1
    @CharlesGann1 Před 2 lety +2

    Bless you. Praying for rain for you and ourselves! Thank you for sharing your journey and the many decisions that involved in drought management.

  • @harrisonallen226
    @harrisonallen226 Před 2 lety +1

    You and all the other farmers and ranchers impacted by the drought are in our prayers. Keep up the good work, Doc.

  • @kylebrumfield3515
    @kylebrumfield3515 Před 2 lety +2

    Thank you for all the tips and information. I sure hope we all get some rain soon.

  • @maximilianmargraf5501
    @maximilianmargraf5501 Před rokem +1

    I read/heard that when you get into a drought, you have no rain you also have less/no nutrients leaching from the grass into the ground. That means the grass has a higher nutrient content and that's a reason why cattle also seem to eat less when in a drought.

  • @williambryan2804
    @williambryan2804 Před 2 lety +2

    I watched a weather forecast that is updated weekly. The meteorologist concentrates mainly on the Pacific Northwest but he does talk about the rest of the US and even the world. According to what he's seeing, he believes there is a strong likelihood the draught here in Texas will last into the late fall.
    A neighbor who works at a nearby convenience store told me she was talking with a man who said he bought a heifer for $8.00. My wife said she was told about a guy who bought a cow/calf pair for $12.00.
    Buying hay in advance is really smart. We have two cows (one is going to the butcher for hamburger) and we just bought 20 more round bales.

  • @roycegaida5300
    @roycegaida5300 Před 7 dny

    Love your content, keep it coming

  • @WvhKerkhof
    @WvhKerkhof Před rokem +2

    You need different grass strains, one for a wet period, one for a dry period, one for cold, one for hot, mixed with some flowers.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      Takes time and money to establish. Took a ton of effort to get the grass I currently have. Just planted Elbon Rye for winter grazing, so trying to make progress.

  • @jamiemyers1622
    @jamiemyers1622 Před 2 lety

    Great job on pasture management. We just received rain yesterday. It had been in between 7-8 weeks. No regrowth obviously. We are struggling as well. Prayers for rain in August. Thank you for the video

  • @Hotrodford
    @Hotrodford Před rokem +2

    In my part of south Texas it’s sandy loam there’s nothing but dirt left. Last measurable rain we had was in December2021, since then we’ve had about 2 inches. Prickly pear and Trees are starting to die, weeds are even dead. Wildlife is suffering and I’m trying to feed and water them too.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      Are things looking up now? We are way behind on rain still but are hanging in there.

    • @Hotrodford
      @Hotrodford Před rokem

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher we got about two inches of rain about three nights ago when that little cool front came in but that’s it. It settled the dust. The ground soaked it right up. We didn’t make one pecan this year and next to no acorns. Pear beds even suffered. We really need to get those stock tanks refilled. If this drought goes into next year like it looks like and we don’t get those much needed rains between now and spring it’s really going to hurt. . We need those long slow steady rains. We are still in exceptional drought category.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      @@Hotrodford definitely worrisome. Praying it gets better for all of us. Hang in there!

  • @williamwallace7299
    @williamwallace7299 Před rokem +1

    Cliff, those cows look great for your conditions. Hang in there

  • @mpojr
    @mpojr Před 2 lety

    good luck Cliff hope things work out for you.

  • @rogercrawford8372
    @rogercrawford8372 Před rokem +1

    You’re doing an excellent job with weed control. I have enough grass for a couple months. I’ve procrastinated on buying hay so far. I may have to haul hay out of Oklahoma that has been through the irrigation process. May end up selling my cows and keep my two horses. God bless.

  • @lonely4wd
    @lonely4wd Před 2 lety +1

    I think I would be lining up some water companies so you would be ready to fill your ponds, and I would have a water tank on a trailer to pull with your tractor.

  • @dwightjackson3180
    @dwightjackson3180 Před 2 lety

    I can sympathize with you on the drought,, here in NE Arkansas, the drought has been brutal all summer. We did receive some rain had 10 days ago, but the grass is slow to recover. I'm a cotton farmer with irrigation wells, and can get through a drought, but it's terribly expensive. Hopefully the rain will return soon, and give ya'll some relief. Keep up the video's, I always enjoy them!

  • @kfvernon73
    @kfvernon73 Před 2 lety +1

    Another informative video Cliff. If you get to the point of destocking I hope you post a video in advance as I hope to have about 70 acres (on Hwy 21 just west of Madisonville) soon for use to start a small herd and will be interested. Not the best time to start back, but tough times present opportunities as well.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety

      I will indeed Kenny! Shoot me an email at southpollcows@gmail.com so I can find you again! I’ll screenshot this as well!

  • @ericbradley4204
    @ericbradley4204 Před 2 lety

    Praying for rain in north central Texas as well. We got about 1/2 inch in the last 30 days and that has helped us tremendously. However many of my neighbors are already feeding hay and selling cows. Our pasture rotation program has made all the difference for us. Giving the grass time to rest and regrow with that little bit of rain and allowing it to stay thick and cover the ground has kept us green. I am concerned about how it will look after our last grazing pass this summer. Praying for rain to see us through.

  • @MegF142857
    @MegF142857 Před rokem +1

    My hoof trimmer says that the stressed partially green grass is very dangerous for my horses to eat. Most of the grass in my yard is brown & crunchy. There are a few spots where I rinse my feed buckets & over my septic tank lines that are still green. There are other areas with less mowed longer grass that has bits of green (like in your pasture). -- I've heard the stressed grass is a concern for horses with laminitic tendencies.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      In our area, it’s the lush, fast growing grass that causes laminitis. At least in our area, we don’t see laminitis during drought (stressed) conditions.

  • @alancooper5386
    @alancooper5386 Před 2 lety +3

    a water well is needed every 1 mile in every direction on land u own. there is water down there u just gotta drill deep enough to reach it.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +1

      We sit over the richest aquifer in Texas. Excellent water!

    • @movinon1242
      @movinon1242 Před rokem

      There has to be a cost-benefit analysis on how much value each additional well brings to an operation vs. how much that well costs to drill.
      For 30-40 head on an already fairly well-irrigated ranch (ponds, existing wells, city water connections, etc.), there's diminishing returns on drilling any new wells.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      Agreed. Thankfully, all these wells were here when we purchased the property.

  • @davemi00
    @davemi00 Před 2 lety +1

    I would Hot Wire that pond ..so they could only drink at those designated spots. God bless.

  • @westvane
    @westvane Před 2 lety +4

    How often are you moving your cattle? Some of the most successful drought management programs I have seen are using smaller paddocks and daily or twice daily moves. This seems to give the grass more time to recover before you come back through.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +2

      I’m typically moving every 4 to 5 days. My main limitation is time as I still work as a veterinarian full time. No doubt rotating daily or twice daily would be helpful, but it’s been so dry and so hot, I’m not seeing any regrowth in pastures that are rested as of the last several weeks. I just drove from here to South Carolina and back. Went northern route through north Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia, and then back from Florida and along the entire gulf coast. Green the entire way once we left Texas. Lots of good rain almost all the way. What a difference!! Totally brown when we got back here 😩.

    • @westvane
      @westvane Před 2 lety

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher Thanks for the response. I can understand the limitations you are under, especially with a full time job in addition to ranching. That definitely makes it harder to do daily moves. I also understand your point about there not being regrowth regardless of how often you move if there is no moisture for the grass. I hope you get some rain soon.

  • @woody579
    @woody579 Před rokem

    I'm so heartbroken for the Texans hold on long as you can prayers are powerful this will break by Sept I'm praying for you all

  • @johnrosier1686
    @johnrosier1686 Před rokem

    This is rough to watch. We have some regions in the country that are flooding and others that need rain real bad.
    Hope all the best for you.

  • @flyhigh5056
    @flyhigh5056 Před rokem

    West Auction:
    Market Analysis for sale of 08/11/2022:
    Packer cows and bulls - steady to $2 higher. Pairs and Bred cows - steady. #1 stocker steers and heifers - $2 to $5 higher. #1 feeder steers and heifers - $2 to $5 higher. Pricing higher

  • @eduardooberto408
    @eduardooberto408 Před 2 lety

    Thanks for information. You experiece is really good. I live Panamá ...

  • @tim7409
    @tim7409 Před 2 lety +1

    Pastures look good considering the lack of moisture. How much clover or legume do you have in the paddocks ? Looks like you could benefit from them. . Nice job with the cattle, well cared for.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety

      I have a pretty good stand on 60 acres in a normal moisture year. Almost none came up this year. Have only planted reseeding varieties (Ball, Arrowleaf). Clover here (in years with enough moisture) is gone by June because of the heat. Tough environment.

  • @theresalarson9416
    @theresalarson9416 Před rokem +1

    Praying for you in Texas. How is it going on your place since this video?

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem +2

      Much better! Have had 2.3” of rain (much less then surrounding areas but grass is green again so we are very blessed)!

  • @wallyyuriy8912
    @wallyyuriy8912 Před rokem +1

    2017 we were dry here (se Sask) 3” rain all year.
    Had no hay to make
    2021 we got 5” all year.
    Been a rough go

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      How are things so far this year?

    • @wallyyuriy8912
      @wallyyuriy8912 Před rokem +1

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher 10.5 inches this year. Not terrible.
      4” of it came in mid May to fill our dugouts thankfully. Atleast we don’t have to haul water to cattle in the pasture this summer

  • @robertrees5470
    @robertrees5470 Před rokem +1

    New subscriber love the info, have you done a topic on mesquite take over? We have a place north of Fredericksburg and south of Llano.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      I haven’t but I will!!

    • @robertrees5470
      @robertrees5470 Před rokem

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher Thanks! It’s interesting to see the difference in soil from Willow City and our other place, south of Llano. Mesquites don’t care. I don’t really want to use chemicals but the massive amount of time it would take to pluck Mesquites from the ground and their roots seems endless and expensive. When you do it can you talk about what you see with Sendero Herbicide or anything similar vs mechanical and best practices to clear 30-50- 100 acre plots. I look forward to the discussions!
      Learning a lot! All the best

  • @lonestar9453
    @lonestar9453 Před 2 lety +1

    Hopefully we'll get something our neighbor had a small grass fire already

  • @movinon1242
    @movinon1242 Před rokem +1

    Is it too late to consider the abattoir and some freezers vs. the sale barn? In the next 6-18 months the USA should be seeing beef prices explode with all this drought-driven culling.

  • @safffff1000
    @safffff1000 Před rokem

    Have you developed thru mop grazing establishing organic humus? Each inch per acre will retain 25,000 gallons and if you had 12 inches thus storing 300,000 gal.

  • @MrBillgiles
    @MrBillgiles Před rokem +2

    It is great to see your cattle grazing outside as you would see here in Ireland. I had understood that most cattle in USA are housed in yards, am I wrong? Can someone tell me what Regenerative Farming is? Great looking beasts.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      Most of the cattle are raised and kept on pasture. The confinement comes when finishing the cattle that will be slaughtered for meat.

    • @movinon1242
      @movinon1242 Před rokem

      Regerative farming means a lot of different things to different people. The general theme is to work with nature and your environment and try to avoid external inputs like feed and fertilizer. It often requires a considerable rethink on the agricultural practices adopted over the last half century.

    • @MrBillgiles
      @MrBillgiles Před rokem

      @@movinon1242 Thanks.

  • @joseywales7525
    @joseywales7525 Před rokem +1

    @Cliff Honnas Regenerative Rancher & Equine Surgeon What part of Tejas do you reside fren? Looks like Gonzales area

  • @johnscott8221
    @johnscott8221 Před rokem

    Emory and Athens had long lines because they were closed for 3 sales around 4th of July.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      My source that sells cattle at Emory says they didn’t have a sale the 2nd and 5th. He’s not sure about Athens but doubts they missed any sale days cause theirs is on fridays. Regardless, it’s dry dry dry and water is in short supply as is grass. Tough year.

  • @thesmiths629
    @thesmiths629 Před 2 lety +1

    My goats are dry lotted here in what was an east texas thicket. Even briar are drying up and dying

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +2

      The next crisis is no hay growing that will be available for winter feeding. Can still grow it if it rains this Fall, but if not, major jam.

    • @thesmiths629
      @thesmiths629 Před 2 lety

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher I pray the Lord make known the way for His people to get through this time. If it be His will.

  • @elmergamez
    @elmergamez Před 2 lety +1

    In any moment rain there where you are in Texas.
    Here in Sonora México are airplanes making travels to make rain and it is working because second year in a row good rain for the pasture which born with rain..
    With one good rain you'll be out of that issue.. it is better try to make rain with airplanes it is hughe Texas

  • @MrMarkar1959
    @MrMarkar1959 Před rokem +1

    Bummer there aint any good places to work either. gloom despair and agony on me😭

  • @T_Humphries
    @T_Humphries Před 2 lety

    Your doing a good job with what you have to work with. What is the hay situation in your area?

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +1

      The hay situation is dire. Good hay almost non existent because none growing. They are baling Milo stubble, corn stalks and rice straw. Milo stubble in our area is $100 a roll. Not sure what the other will sell for.

    • @T_Humphries
      @T_Humphries Před 2 lety

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher Wow! And like you mentioned in the video, transportation cost are too high to bring in hay. Our fields here in my area in north Alabama are very dry also. A field that usually yields in the 50's on a second cutting made 14 rolls and my county is a D0 on the U.S. Drought Monitor map. Most of Texas is D3 and D4. Hang in there Sir and keep us updated

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety

      Will do!!

  • @jimmason1072
    @jimmason1072 Před 2 lety +1

    When you get into years of hard drought like in Australia.....then you will be cutting down you forest trees to feed them....crazy weather....

  • @petealberda6307
    @petealberda6307 Před rokem

    How are things in Texas? We would like an update sometime. Thanks.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem +1

      Got our first rain Monday. Was getting really bad. Will try and update this weekend. Thanks for asking!

    • @petealberda6307
      @petealberda6307 Před rokem

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher Things were dry here in Michigan too, though not as bad as Texas. We rolled 140 bales of first cutting off a 25 acre field but only got 20 second cutting bales. No fun. Good luck!

  • @yootoob2078
    @yootoob2078 Před rokem

    is there not a way to get most of the water into tanks and the tanks into buildings to prevent evaporation? put the tanks on automatic time release into troughs or something. one would think whatever time/energy/expense one would incur would more than pay for itself in the prevention of evaporation and that water that didn't evaporate but instead went into the bellys of farm animals/crops. also building some sort of makeshift greenhouses at strategic locations and the water that would have evaporated could also be used for them.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před rokem

      I supposed there’s a way but one good rain and they will be full.

    • @movinon1242
      @movinon1242 Před rokem

      That sounds like a very expensive bit of irrigation and engineering, both to build and then maintain. As it is it looks like he has some wells or connections where the livestock can drink from.
      Do you have an example of where what you are talking about has been done?

  • @bandit4true
    @bandit4true Před rokem +2

    Have you gotten any rain in your area of Texas as yet

  • @MistressOP
    @MistressOP Před rokem +1

    praying for rain for you
    ima be honest here. If i lived in cali and texas I'd never graze that far down. with climate change id probably never graze that far down again in my lifetime. you need to check out Greg Judy grazing school. I know people want it short for horses but frankly, i'd let them graze taller and supplement then graze that far down for "perfect" equine pasture. Because you are gonna be knocked down to hay if you aren't careful. but I've never had to feed hay in the summer because we run ducks and geese sheep and goats as well as horses and cattle. you got some pretty cattle though :) great channel. Oh we also feed seaweed. in an emergency because of fire reasons.
    I'd say i'd never graze that low if it could be avoided for any of the southwest come to think about it.
    the reason why i wouldn't graze that fair down in cali or texas if I could avoid it. it cooks the ground. Normally when I take over land that's beaten up (not like yours .. your looks pretty nice). I always run the ducks and geese then I put some small woodchips and leaves down. For 4 years in a row to recover the pasture. Let it grow high and take horses that are a bit too fat. let them high graze to help em lose weight. The goose or ducks prefer goose because they are very good with grass and forbs. Then I run sheep or goats, or rabbits. to finish it off. Then I let it grow tall again so it gets those seed heads and brings in either horses (are really good for planting seeds through manure) or cattle. Then ducks again or goose, then skip building the warm season seed bank. Let the horses come back in eat tall. It could really bring back that pasture. Because you got so much pasture exposed to that baking cali/texas heat which can wreck your pasture even outside of drought. It really makes me sad that the program for free leaves is scaled back in cali with everyone pulling down trees. Because they'd pay you to take it lol. You can also use cardboard but it must be soaked and mix chopped really small.
    you mix the cardboard with leaves and woodchips.
    be careful not to let it dry you can also mix it with compost. leaf, woodchip, and cardboard. in some places they pay you to take the cardboard and if you have a paved drive near the city for drop off. You can get the arborist to drop woodchip for free. (make sure you have lighting for the truck so they are regular)

  • @sstarkey1695
    @sstarkey1695 Před 2 lety

    Belton, Tx is on fire!

  • @donbrutcher4501
    @donbrutcher4501 Před 2 lety +1

    Too bad you can't summer a couple hundred thousand head up here in the northeast. Our winters can be rather unpleasant though.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety

      Wish we could make that happen!!

    • @movinon1242
      @movinon1242 Před rokem +1

      Margins on beef for ranchers are already basically 0%. Shipping an animal anywhere but the abbatoir or, sadly, the sale barn, would be tough to justify.

    • @donbrutcher4501
      @donbrutcher4501 Před rokem

      @@movinon1242 I agree with you on the economics of such a move. Too bad just the same. We have former farm land around here going back to the wild and grass up to our armpits. I would guess we could easily support thousands of grazing animals.

  • @jcobe-qi6mv
    @jcobe-qi6mv Před 2 lety

    how many head did you have on the 38 acres for 30 day?

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +1

      50 cows and around 30 calves

    • @jcobe-qi6mv
      @jcobe-qi6mv Před 2 lety

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher that pasture held up well. We are extremely dry here in southern Missouri too. Hope we all get some rain.

  • @stevecapps6332
    @stevecapps6332 Před 2 lety

    How many head do you run on the 38 acres?

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +1

      50 cows and currently about 30 calves. I rotationally graze them through 5 to 10 acre paddocks.

    • @jeffwindham1304
      @jeffwindham1304 Před 2 lety +1

      Your running 50 cows and 30 calves on 38 acres??

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +1

      That’s just one pasture. I thought you were just inquiring about the 38 acres. The total land I run them on is 163 acres and I rotate them through in 5 to 10 acre paddocks.

  • @RippleAffect
    @RippleAffect Před 2 lety +2

    The father of weaponized weather Ben Livingston

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +1

      Frightening to say the least.

    • @RippleAffect
      @RippleAffect Před 2 lety +1

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher they're definitely manipulating the weather if they wanted it to rain they could do cloud seeding to stop the drought

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety +1

      Why “they” want to wreck the country, I’ll never understand, but it definitely appears that way.

    • @RippleAffect
      @RippleAffect Před 2 lety

      @@cliffhonnasregenerativerancher I believe they want us to be like North Korea Klaus Schwab says we will own nothing and be happy 😏

  • @islami658
    @islami658 Před 2 lety +1

    Wouldn’t molasses make them thirsty

  • @joniboyd5052
    @joniboyd5052 Před rokem

    Hi

  • @ramaraokommineni4326
    @ramaraokommineni4326 Před rokem +1

    Hi
    How are you
    You from

  • @garyhansen57
    @garyhansen57 Před rokem

    2022 hasn't happened yet!

  • @LMBrown3900
    @LMBrown3900 Před 2 lety

    How about using ping pong balls or something similar to reduce evaporation?
    I think there's a reservoir in CA? using that technique...

    • @enderwhitekey7238
      @enderwhitekey7238 Před 2 lety

      Not very regenerative...

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety

      I’ve seen that done in California. Probably effective but expensive to do and tough work to clean up when no longer needed, plus not regenerative at all.

    • @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC
      @LarsonFamilyFarm-LLC Před 2 lety +1

      My pond still has water...everyone else's around me in Ferris, Texas has dried up...only difference is i have duckweed growing in mine...shades the water and seals the water from evaporation. FSA, USDA and NCRS a bit clueless about the wonders of duckweed to maintain ponds and lakes.

    • @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher
      @cliffhonnasregenerativerancher  Před 2 lety

      That’s awesome! Good for you!

    • @morgandauteuil340
      @morgandauteuil340 Před rokem

      I don’t think anyone here got this joke, considering lake Powell hahahaha